The Black-Necked Stilt


The Black-Necked Stilt (Himantopus mexicanus) is one of the characteristic birds of the fresh or salty shallow sloughs and grassy marshes. It is a large (15" to 17" from tip of bill to end of tail), small bodied wader, black above and white below when standing. In flight, the wings are entirely black, and the underparts, rump, and tail are white with the long, cherry-red, pipe-stem legs extending behind.

The stilts are not shy birds, but are wary. If approached too closely they rise with a harsh scream; if badly frightened, they continue screaming. When alarmed while in the water, they raise their long wings and rise as lightly as if on land, then squat quietly down in groups, each bird facing the wind. If a person comes too near their nest, the bird draws the intruder's attention away from it by stalking into the open, bending and bobbing up and down, or faking the broken wing act.
The suitable feeding places are few and scattered, so the black-necked stilt population is not evenly distributed throughout its range. It prefers the little wading pools and the shorelines, where it gathers its food by running about in the shallow waters. As one observer comments, "Stilts run very fast, but they will stop suddenly, bend their long legs and pick up something from the ground, then off again after more food."
Their food consists of small water snails, insects, worms, and some small fry of fishes. Lillian Grace Paca, in her "Introduction to Western Birds" (Sunset Book), notes, "Around fish hatcheries they are welcome guests ... for they eat the water beetles that prey on the insect life that is the natural food of most young fish. They also destroy grasshoppers and their larvae, and the destructive pillbugs that feed on corn.
The Black-Necked Stilts begin to build their nests about the first week in May. The nest is placed on a dry mud flat or on a hummock in the marsh, using old grass, and gradually adding to its height with dry twigs, roots of salt grass, and seaweed until the whole nest may weigh between two and three pounds. This habit of adding new material under the base of the nest after the female begins sitting is characteristic of most other birds that breed in marshes, and probably results from an instinctive fear of high water. The four to seven buff colored eggs are spotted with large black blotches. Colonies of nests placed within fifteen to twenty yards apart are not unusual. Audubon writes, "While the females are sitting, the males pay them much attention, watching the approach of intruders, chasing away the red-winged blackbirds and crows. When the young are hatched, they leave the nest and follow their parents through the grass, but when danger appears they squat and are motionless."
There are seven or eight species of black-necked stilts throughout the world, but only one native to the United States. The Hawaiian Islands have their own resident species. In the United States they are found in the western and southeastern states, and on south to Peru. The winter areas are mainly south of United States and on the Pacific coast north to San Francisco Bay. They breed mainly from southern Oregon, northern Utah and southern Colorado.
Dr. Pearson comments, "Although this large wader is now very rare in the eastern United States, it is still found in the west and south, and under the protection that seems assured to it by the new Federal Migratory Bird law, the species should long survive to give grace and beauty to many of the waste places of the continent."
-- by Marie L. Atkinson
Editor's Note: The charts showing the "Seasonal Abundance of Birds on the Bear River Refuge" indicate that the best time to find the peak population of the Black-Necked Stilt is the latter part of April and early weeks of May. As many as 7,500 have been recorded on the refuge during this period.

REFERENCES:
Field Guide to Western Birds
Roger Tory Peterson

National Geographic



Utah Nature Study Society
NATURE NEWS/NOTES
April 1973
Adapted for
The INTERNET
by Sandra Bray


Other Utah Marsh Birds
Utah Marshes
More Birds and Bees
UTAH NATURE STUDY SOCIETY -- HOME PAGE


Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1